Critics’ Picks

Don Henley Don Henley’s new album, Inside Job–his first in 11 years, incidentally, making it “one of the most eagerly awaited albums of the new century,” or so reads the back of the advance CD–arrived in the mail a month ago. I still have not listened to it, and I…

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Robert Earl Keen’s Texas Uprising In theory, Robert Earl Keen’s Texas Uprising is a splendid idea: A celebration of rising singer-songwriter and neo-country talent from Texas, capped off by one of the state’s finest products since Big Red soda. In practice, it’s almost as good, if slightly schizoid to these…

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National Skyline Sitting at home during a break from touring with his band Hum after the release of its surprisingly successful major-label debut, 1995’s You’d Prefer an Astronaut, Jeff Dimpsey decided to write a 40-plus-minute song. Well, he didn’t intend the song to be almost an hour in length–it just…

It’s G-L-O-R-I-A

Potential. It’s an overused and double-edged word, implying lack of present-tense success and the possibility of future failure. It’s is a word that was used, quite accurately and frequently, to describe what the band Mineral had. The group released only two full-length albums, The Power of Failing and EndSerenading, during…

Better‘s not better

Electronic music may have survived the great hype of 1997, but the aftershocks still echo through the halls of the pop industrial complex. Now, the music is healthier than ever, in no small part because of the fact that the majors have realized there is no quick buck to be…

Out Here

Stick Men with Ray Guns Some People Deserve to Suffer (We Don’t Have the Time Productions) From nowhere–or Lantana, Florida, more precisely–arrives this 16-song tombstone, to be placed on Stick Men with Ray Guns’ unmarked grave. Noisy, messy, and unholy, this disc of previously unreleased lumps of coal–most of them…

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Fang It’s no secret that Fang’s decade-long hiatus was because of vocalist Sam “Sammytown” McBride’s eight-year stint in a California prison. His time in the joint was fairly short considering the reason he landed there: The strangulation death of his 24-year-old girlfriend while he was completely out of his head…

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REO Speedwagon, Styx, Starship, Loverboy, and Eddie Money Is this a concert bill or a punch line to a joke that begins with the words “April Wine?” If you don’t know the answer, most likely you’ve already been to Texas Tickets and paid $500 for a pair of front-row tickets…

Oh bury me not

Standing on the stage of New York’s Hammerstein Ballroom, the old man looked broken, beaten down, a scream reduced to a whisper. It had been almost two years since he had last performed in public, after announcing in October 1997 that he was suffering from Shy-Drager Syndrome, a form of…

One more time

“Welcome to my website. Yes, this is the same Joe Jackson who had a couple of pop hits some years ago. A lot of people have understandably lost track of me over the last five years or so…I’m not dead yet.” –Introduction to www.joejackson.com Joe Jackson’s autobiography–A Cure for Gravity,…

Cajun against the machine

To the casual listener, Louisiana’s two major roots music styles, Zydeco and Cajun, probably sound like similar servings from the same pot of gumbo. It’s an understandable misperception; both Zydeco and Cajun accent the accordion and dancing, and the two genres share many of the same riffs and even songs,…

Scene, heard

Good Records recently launched its new online radio station, Radio Good, located at www.radiogood.com. Well, it’s not completely new: For the most part, Radio Good is an updated version of daisyradio, the Internet-only radio station started by the members of Tripping Daisy about a year and a half ago. Radio…

Out There

XTC Wasp Star (Apple Venus Volume 2) (TVT Records) When Apple Venus Volume 1 was released last year, no one should have expected XTC’s Andy Partridge and Colin Moulding to live up to albums like 1979’s Drums & Wires or 1982’s English Settlement; it’s like asking someone to slip comfortably…

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Radney Foster If there’s one artist who should serve as an example of how to pursue a career in country music, it’s Radney Foster. Note that I said should, because the example Foster provides may not be the quickest path to fame and fortune, but it is a model of…

Some things he did

To those who knew Roxy Gordon, the news of his passing on February 7 may have caught them a little off guard, but the official cause of death didn’t come as much of a surprise: cirrhosis of the liver. The man loved his liquor. Sorry if that sounds blunt, but…

Roadworn and weary

Two days into a tour that doesn’t end until the middle of July, Eddie Spaghetti is in a room at San Francisco’s Commodore Hotel, checking the place for anything he may have left behind before he gets into a van and back on the road. Spaghetti’s band, The Supersuckers, played…

Ice ice babies

Second only to the party island of Ibiza, Iceland’s capital Reykjavik has earned a reputation in the last few years as the world’s hippest hangout. With 24 hours of daylight from May through July, all-night partying is deeply ingrained in this city, which boasts more artistic types per capita than…

Out There

Sleater-Kinney All Hands on the Bad One (Kill Rock Stars) Five years ago, back when Sleater-Kinney was just starting out, the song “I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone” gave the band a bold statement of purpose that couldn’t help but be noticed. Co-founders Carrie Brownstein and Corin Tucker made a…

Out Here

Jamal Mohame Beledi (Self-titled) Jamal Mohamed is that most honorable of all curses — a musician’s musician. On top of that, he’s a drummer’s drummer. Meaning: He may be better than all the rest, but no one knows his name. But they should. Mohamed is the finest jack-of-all-trades percussionist in…

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Blink-182, Bad Religion The old guys sitting on their porches are right: Kids these days don’t have any respect for their elders. Or maybe they aren’t right. For example, we have Bad Religion. With a career stretching back 20 years (to the — gulp — Reagan era), they are one…

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Deathray Here’s hoping that new wave makes a comeback. Somewhere between machine-generated blips and the human emotions of songwriting, the ’80s-era pop style could be just the thing to help all those boy-band fans bridge the gap between the Backstreet Boys and Big Star, once their hormones settle a bit…

Critics’ Picks

The Smashing Pumpkins What’s worse? A new Smashing Pumpkins album that provokes and experiments but ultimately comes up short, or a new Smashing Pumpkins album that just comes up short? With Billy Corgan’s much-trounced last disc, 1998’s Adore, the gifted, megalomaniacal songwriter wrestled with his mother’s death, the firing of…